(Originally posted to social media on May 17, 2023)
By 1969, I was into my second year on Staff at Camp Powhatan. I remember that was the summer I became an Eagle Scout. It was the same night that they landed on the moon. We were able to watch some of that grainy footage up in the Staff Camp. I recall that it was a wonderful summer in a lot of ways. My favorite times were the weekends. Most of the Staff took off and went home. But I was part of a very small number of staff who stayed every weekend.
I could take a canoe out into the lake without having to worry about all of the rules and standards. I did have a lifejacket for a pillow. I could drape a fishing rod over the side and let the wind push me around that small lake. I would catch trout until i got tired of it and then I would just chill out in the sun. I was not teaching any classes or trying to corral hundreds of small boys.
Up in the camp office there was a central speaker system that connected to dozens of speakers that were attached to the trees around camp. You could make announcements or you could put on a record to play for the masses. There were recordings of Reville and Taps that had been played so many times that they had deep grooves in the records. On weekends people would come in and play their own music for the few of us who were still on the property. There was a lot of Johnny Cash. I still know all of the words to most Johnny Cash songs. They also played a record from a duo who had a one hit record called 2525. It was all about the distant future and it was a haunting song. I also still know all of the words to that one. The guy who wrote it did so in about 10 minutes after a night of hard drinking. It was his only hit. I remember a song called Ruby. “Oh Ruby, don’t take your love to town”. They would sometimes play hard rock by Iron Butterfly or the Who. I did not care, I loved it all. Drifting around and staring at that cloudless sky, it created a wonderful memory. I was alone but I was not lonely. I was by myself but I could sense the sprits of thousands of young men who had passed this way. It was a wonderful place to be a kid.
(Copyright by John Hankins; all rights reserved. Published here by permission of the author.)



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